Anambra State House of Assembly Staff Welfare Association

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Anambra State House of Assembly Staff Welfare Association Anambra State House Of Assembly Staff Welfare Association

A Most Deserving Recognition.That Hon Chugbo Enwezor was recently conferred with the award of most vibrant legislator in...
19/04/2019

A Most Deserving Recognition.

That Hon Chugbo Enwezor was recently conferred with the award of most vibrant legislator in the 6th assembly of the Anambra State House Of Assembly by the Parliamentary Staff Association Of Nigeria (Anambra State Chapter) is no longer news and it is a telling testimony to his sagacity and pivotal roles he has played all along to shape the tone & direction of the house in the past eight years.

Some may not truly appreciate the gravity of this most deserving award but it is instructive to note that it was conferred by men & women who have the privilege of working behind the scenes in the house, assisting and ensuring that the business of lawmaking remains seamless thereby placing them in vantage position to observe and determine lawmakers whose important roles ensure that their job is easy.

Hon Chugbo Enwezor is that lawmaker peers naturally look up to for direction and with his grasp of the law, he has been able to assist the house navigate the many legal loopholes that would naturally appear gargantuan to laymen but beyond his wealth of legal knowledge, his infectious natural wisdom & his affable personality, he has consistently ensured that his peers feel most comfortable seeking his views on a myriad of issues confronting the house and his personal mantra has always remained "To treat everyman equal & to stand in defence of Truth, Equity & Justice"...

Onitsha North 1 constituents remain grateful for his tireless efforts at ensuring purposeful representation remains the cornerstone of his stewardship and his many achievements stand as a memorial & testimony to the purposeful human being's capacity to visualize and follow every milestone to the letter...

We thank the Parliamentary Staff Association of Nigeria (Anambra State Chapter) for emphatically making the case we have all along been saying about this great man's uncanny ability to provide qualitative leadership and we join all well meaning members of our great party APGA, citizens of Anambra State & Constituents of Onitsha North 1 in congratulating Hon Chugbo Enwezor for this recognition which we daresay is but a prelude to more service...

May God continue to bless & keep our great party APGA & may the wisdom He has deposited in Hon Chugbo Enwezor continually be deployed in the service to Humanity.

Thank You.

Ezennia Nonso Chukwudebe

Director Media/Publicity

Odezuligbo Progressive Movement.
Thur April 18, 2019

Wishing Mr.Chinedu&Mrs.Luis Uyalor,  Marital Bliss....
06/10/2018

Wishing Mr.Chinedu&Mrs.Luis Uyalor, Marital Bliss....

15/09/2018
Celebrating Chinedu Akpunonu of Publication Dept. on his wedding day 15092018.....wishing the couple marital bliss.
15/09/2018

Celebrating Chinedu Akpunonu of Publication Dept. on his wedding day 15092018.....
wishing the couple marital bliss.

Members of the Anambra State House of Assembly Staff Welfare Association wish Honourable Pascal Agbodike Happy married l...
05/08/2017

Members of the Anambra State House of Assembly Staff Welfare Association wish Honourable Pascal Agbodike Happy married life and all that it takes for divinely designed Marital Bliss.

Members and Staff of the Anambra State House of Assembly are invited to the Trad.marriage/wedding ceremony of Honourable...
20/07/2017

Members and Staff of the Anambra State House of Assembly are invited to the Trad.marriage/wedding ceremony of Honourable Pascal Agbodike scheduled for 5th August, 2017.

11/04/2017

PAPER PRESENTED BY MR. C.E.A. JIBUAKU AT THE PUBLIC HEARING ON THE BILL FOR A LAW TO CONTROL BURIAL/FUNERAL ACTIVITIES IN ANAMBRA STATE ON WEDNESDAY 5TH APRIL, 2017 AT THE COMMITTEE ROOM, ANAMBRA STATE HOUSE OF ASSEMBLY

I feel highly honoured to be invited to contribute my opinion at the public hearing on the Bill For A Law To Control Burial/Funeral Activities in Anambra State and hereby express my profound gratitude.

May I further express my deep appreciation of the leadership quality exhibited by the current members of Anambra State House of Assembly, in particular Honourable (Engineer) Charles Ezeani who sponsored the bill, for seeing the need to control the excesses in burial ceremonies in the state. In doing so, you are really fulfilling the most important function of leadership which according to Edgar Schein is to “Create and manage culture” He added that “if you do not manage culture, culture will manage you” To appreciate the veracity of this statement, one needs only wonder how come about that the Nigerian erstwhile functioning education, health, civil service, electricity, pipe borne water in cities and some rural areas, railways, airways, etc have all degenerated today. The importance of right values in any society aspiring to develop cannot be over emphasized.

Chinua Achebe in his book “An Image of Africa And The Trouble With Nigeria attributed Nigerian problem to “a seminal absence of intellectual rigour in the political thought of our founding fathers – a tendency to pious materialistic woolliness and self-centred pedestrianism”. The reality is that rigourous thinking by the members of the Anambra State House of Assembly is abundantly evident in this bill. We pray that more of such bills/motions that would reorient the values of people of Anambra State and beyond would be forthcoming in future, bills/motions in other areas like falling reading culture, poor time keeping and management and noise pollution.

With the bill passed into law in place, the next thing to desire is that the people of Anambra State see the good in it and develop the discipline to keep it. We have to in the interest of the development of the State. We have to if we consider the enormous sacrifices made by some other countries to develop. One of the causes of Industrial Revolution in Britain in the 18th century was Protestant Saving Spirit. China made a law of one couple one child. This was relaxed to two children only last year. The law was obeyed. India bought the Morris Oxford /Cambridge franchise from Britain and set up a factory where they have been manufacturing the car they named Ambassador. They made the car their national vehicle and it is being driven by all Indians from their President down. They have kept to this ever since. What I am saying is that we should be prepared to make sacrifices to develop. We must endeavour to make a success of this all important bill when passed into law by obeying it.

May I draw attention to this book titled Modern Burial ceremonies in Igboland, Feasting or Mourning, written by me and published last December. It was coincidental for it was after its publication that I learnt that a bill to regulate burial ceremonies in Anambra State was in making in the Anambra State House of Assembly. In the book attempt is made to show how burial ceremonies were conducted in olden days and the extent these impact on the ways we do them nowadays. The adverse economic, social and moral implications of the mode of burial ceremonies we practice these days are high-lighted. So also are the efforts made in the past by early Christian missionaries and by the old Anambra State government of Group Captain Emeka Omerua. Prof. Pita Ejiofor was the Commissioner for Finance then and was indeed the brain behind of the campaign which was titled Crusade Against Squandemania.

Reasons why despite the efforts the cost of burials has continued to rise instead of falling are covered in chapter 8.

Why the Crusade Against Squandemania was short-lived is covered in chapter 9 and is worth reflecting upon. Chinua Achebes wrote in his book, The Trouble With Nigeria, that “no matter how badly a country may be run, there will always be some people whose personal, selfish interest are, in the short term at least, well served by the mismanagement and the social inequities”. This is brought into bold relief by the incident narrated in the chapter.

One reading the book will find Muslim Funeral Rites described in chapter 10 and will be able to compare theirs with ours and reflect on the rationality or otherwise of ours.

It is considered in chapters 11 and 12 that our mode of burial does not appear to be supported in the Bible. The views of some personages among whom are Francis Cardinal Arinze, Most Rev. Paulinus Ezeokafor Catholic Bishop of Awka and Prof. Pita Ejiofor are portrayed in Chapter 13.

All and all, it can be said that I indeed recommended complete drop of ikwa ozu rite in Igboland for the reasons given in preceding chapters. It is gratifying that this appears to be the import of this bill. Whatever step is taken to bring about moderation in our current profligate culture of feasting, ego-tripping, callousness and syncretism at the death of some one is a most welcome development.

Going through the bill I wish to comment as follows:
5.3 Town unions should be charged with the responsibility. They would only need to be supervised by whichever ministry is charged with the responsibility of seeing to the implementation of the law.

8. How would legacy be defined and by whom? How would it be celebrated different from the provisions made in the law for the generality of the people would it be by extension of the days, cooking, eating, drinking and dancing or what? I think there should be no provision for celebration of legacy. Attendance by people should be allowed to determine of define legacy.

11.2 Bereaved families/church groups should be allowed to manage the timing of activities during the ceremonies, provided that they end them within the one day stipulated.

12. Same as under 11.2

13.1 All condolence visits on the day of burial shall end by 6pm

13.4 This provision is not appropriate and should not be included.

16.c Umunna, umuada and Iyomdi where they have a standing ceremonial uniform. The rest going to burial should be encouraged to wear black dresses or black band worn round the left sleeve of their dresses that are not black. Bright and ostentations dresses should not be worn to funerals.
17.2 Unnecessary. Let the family determine what to give to them.

17.3 Stopping serving food at burials will make attending burial ceremonies less attractive thereby limiting the number attending to those actually concerned and truly touched. The economy will thereby benefit as productivity would be enhanced. However serving of garden eggs and snacks like biscuits, gala and bonce along with drinks should be allowed. Unlike Muslims whose ceremonies are very brief ours last for hours from morning till at least afternoon. Snacks are not very costly. Drinks are indeed more costly. The concern should be how to control drinks. Serving snacks will be in the interest of the visitors some of whom might be having ulcer.

17.4 There shall be no neighborhood or next village entertainment.

17.5 They may be served drinks and snacks there as in 17.3

18. Iyomdi (Iyomdi) and Umunna I believe are members of the zone or unit to which the bereaved family belongs. I feel they should provide food for themselves. Umuada are visitors of a kind. Though married elsewhere, they belong to or originated from families in the village they are coming to because of bereavement. They should therefore be able to cater for themselves to reduce the burden on bereaved families. They may partake of drinks and snacks.

19. Let the local communities decide on this for themselves.

20. Define i
v
vi
22. To be considered is that there are cases where some are buried (Ini Ozu) weeks, months, before their ikwa ozu. It is not only the families of deceased women that are informed during these two stages. Ndi nnaochie are also informed of the death of their nwadiana. Only drinks and kolanuts are given at these stages. It is to be suggested however that these be abolished. Things recommended to be given by the deceased woman’s husband are appropriate.

26. During memorial service no food shall be served. But snacks and drinks could be served.

27. The town unions should be charged with the responsibility of ensuring compliance under the supervision of monitoring agency of the government.

28. Town unions and government agencies exist permanently

29. Their personnel render any public services assigned to them without requiring to be remunerated differently.

30. Town unions are already performing this function and can start performing (a) and (b) as well.

31. As from the commencement of this law, all town unions in the state shall keep records of account of revenue accruing from the enforcement, 80% of this shall go to the town unions and 20% to the state government. The use of the words profit sharing is not appropriate.

32.(i) Fine of N500,000.00

May I conclude by pointing out that beside making the law, providing sanctions for infringement and setting up monitoring and implementation bodies, need exists to appreciate as mentioned in my book that ikwa ozu is a non-material culture and that non-material culture is more resistant to change than material culture like food, transport, houses, clothing etc and that change in non-material culture can be accomplished more by careful education of the people and achievement of attitudinal change than by political or legal procedures. The need exists therefore after passing the law for government to engage in sustained public enlightenment. The churches, Igwes and town unions should be involved. The role already being played by the Catholic Bishop of Awka, Most Rev. Paulinus Ezeokafor, in this regard is highly commendable.

11/04/2017

Presentation by His Lordship Most Rev. Paulinus C. Ezeokafor, the Catholic Bishop of Awka Diocese, at the Public Hearing on the Bill for a Law to Control Burial/Funeral Ceremonial Activities in Anambra State, at the Conference Room, Anambra State House of Assembly Legislative Complex, Awka, 5 April 2017

Greetings/Appreciation
Honourable Speaker of the House of Assembly, Hon Rita Maduagwu
Deputy Speaker of the House of Assembly Hartford Oseke
Chairman House Committee on Information, Culture, and Tourism, Hon. Barr Kingsley C. Iruba
Honourable Members of the House Committee
Honourable Members of the State House of Assembly
Honourable Commissioners
Ndi Igwe, President Generals of Town Union, Religious Leaders, Council of Chiefs, the Media, Civil Society Organisations/General Public, Ladies and Gentlemen

May the peace of the Lord be with you all.

I am glad to have been appointed by the Chairman of the House Committee on Information, Culture and Tourism as a key resource person on this public hearing on the above-mentioned bill. According to the letter written to me by the Chairman and dated 28 March 2017, I was invited “to speak extensively” on this issue. My special tributes go to the sponsor of the bill Hon. (Engr.) Charles Ezeani. To have come out with this bill shows quality representation of the people. I also thank the members of the House for allowing the bill to reach this stage. If they did not consider it worthwhile, they could have nipped it in the bud the first day it made its appearance at the floor of the House. Thank you very much.

Significance of the Bill
The extravagance displayed by our people during burial and funeral ceremonies in the State has reached such a point that there is need for an effective legislation to control; otherwise, we leave our people in such a pitiable situation and bo***ge into which they have been trapped. The way our people degenerate from celebration of life to celebration of death is such that, if left uncontrolled and unregulated, we may likely sink into the hypothetical Hobbesian State of Nature, where life would become “solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short.” Therefore, I consider this bill as unqualifiedly and eternally significant to the citizens of the State and beyond.

I have seen families sell their real Estates, properties, and personal belongings, in order to meet up with the expectations of the society as regards funeral expenses. Businesses have folded up, marriages have broken down, children have been out of school, and sudden deaths have been recorded, simply because people could not reel out of the devastating effects of the huge expenses incurred during the funerals of their loved ones. Families have been put in disarray, community peace has been disrupted, ụmụnna, inyomdi, and ụmụada groups have been engulfed in endless disputes, because of disagreements arising from nonfulfillment of their basic and usually very expensive and unrealistic requirements during funerals.

As I am speaking to you, I know some families who have been in court for years on account of issues arising from funeral expenses and bills. In one of the cases, the majority of the family presumed the Igbo proverb ojinu kwaa na ọbụrọ diọkpala gburu as their operating principle, only to be surprised after the funerals by the huge bill, running into hundreds of millions of Naira, brought forward by the ojinu in the family, who insisted that it must be shared equally among the brothers. They refused, because they claimed he never consulted them before making the expenses. Then he headed for the court.

We can no longer fold our hands as if nothing is happening. Every hand must be on deck to make sure the bill scales through all the legislative processes as soon as possible. Our people need such a legislation as this, especially at this moment the country is going through one of the toughest times in its history.

Journey so Far in Awka Diocese
Awka Diocese has remained undaunted in its fight to salvage the poor from the stranglehold of this vicious circle of extravagant burial and funeral ceremonies. In 1996, my predecessor of blessed memory Most Rev. Simon A. Okafor issued a guideline entitled Death, Burial, Funeral and Widowhood in the Catholic Diocese of Awka: Guidelines and Directives. He issued this after an extensive study of issues involved by experts in the field. Since then, the diocese have not relented in its effort. I have always seized any available opportunity to speak on the dangers of wasteful burials and funerals among our people. I have insisted that what we should be talking about is how to give our people decent and befitting living and not befitting funerals, by which we mean mindless display of extravagance.

Last year, I instituted burial and funeral committee on the diocesan level charged with the responsibility of studying the way our people go about burial and funeral ceremonies in the diocese and bringing out recommendations aimed at curbing unnecessary wastes. As the committee was still working, I centred my Lenten Pastoral Letter of 2017 on the same issue. I titled it Our True Home Is in Heaven (Phil 3:20): Befitting Burial and Funeral for the Dead (Hereafter referred to as LP). In the work, I dwelt so much on the theological, pastoral, moral, socio-cultural, psychological, and economic implications of expensive burial and funeral ceremonies. I would not like to burden you with the details of the letter. I have the booklets with me, and will gladly leave some copies with you. In the observations and recommendations that will follow, I will make references to it where necessary.

I am excited to realize that the current draft bill contains most of the issues I handled in the Pastoral Letter and even more.

Observations
Having gone through the bill, I can make the following observations:
The bill is well thought through. It took into consideration the poor masses of the State, whom the house members were elected to defend against all odds.
It is holistic in its approach, by dealing with all aspects of the burial and funeral ceremonies from the point of death, through registration and preservation of the body, to the burial and termination of the funeral ceremonies.
I am happy that it took care of bodies rejected by family members and those without identifiable families, and the need to create burial grounds in all the Local Governments in the State to have them buried (clause 9). This is very important because burial of the deceased is one of the corporal works of mercy (Tob 1:16-2:6)
The issue of undertakers has been a very worrisome one to the Church. Regulating their activities through the bill is a welcome development (clause 15.1-2). Indeed, the Church has always taught giving due respect to the dead; and the careless tossing of the body during funerals by the undertakers does not do this. I discussed this very well in my Lenten Pastoral (LP nos. 43-46)
In my Lenten Pastoral, I discussed the unwelcome wastage of money and resources through the printing of burial and funeral invitation cards, posters, billboards, etc. I also touched on the issue of preservation of the body for too long in the mortuary, and postponement of burial and funeral proceedings for too long. On this last issue, the diocese has decided not to keep the time between death and funeral beyond two months (see LP nos. 40-42). It is gladdening that the bill is on the same page as we are, by adopting the time lag of not more than two months. Very commendable too is its restriction of the period of funeral to one day (clause 11.1). It will save our people from numerous and unnecessary troubles.
I have already banned the production of brochure in the Catholic Diocese of Awka, with effect from 1 May 2017 (see LP 48-50). The money used for this could be better applied to helping the living. The faithful already know this, and I have received countless phone calls commending the move. The bill also covers this (clause 24), and it is a welcome aspect of the bill that would bring succour to many.
Wearing of mourning dresses/Asoebi has turned into a practice used for display of wealth and importance. Surely, it is a sign of mourning, but the way it is abused has left much to be desired. I have always discouraged the faithful from this (see LP, no. 52). The bill recognized that it has some significance hence its unwillingness to place a blanket ban on it. Restricting it to family members, church groups, ụmụnna, inyomdi, and ụmụada where applicable has taken care of the unnecessary waste in this wise during funerals (clause 16).
I applaud the bill for its restriction of the mourning period to a week. The restriction also took care of the widows in the society (clause 25), who are often the ones who suffer most during the funerals of their deceased husbands, through long periods of restriction of movements and the unchristian so-called state of impurity. In this wise, the bill is deeply biblical, helping to protect the widows in line with the design of God who is the protector of the widow (cf. Psalm 68:5).
I agree with the bill’s stand on the exposition of preserved co**se (clause 12), stoppage of wake-keeping (clause 10), restriction of some burial customs (clause 20), stoppage of funeral on any local market of a town (clause 19), ban on guns (clause 21), and ban on presentation of food to sympathizers (clauses 17 & 26).

The Catholic Diocese of Awka has already stopped all manner of food and souvenirs to priests and religious at the funeral of their parents. We wish to extend this to the laity in due course. That is why I am so happy that the house has taken the bull by the horn in this direction in the present draft bill.
Any legislation without enforcement cannot survive. The bill took care of this by calling for the establishment of monitoring and implementation committee in every town (clause 27). This will ensure that the good intentions of the bill, when it eventually becomes a law, are not lost.
I understand why the bill seeks to make the Church’s funeral proceedings begin not later than 9.00am and not last beyond two hours (clause 11.2). This will help the family and the community to be able to finish all funeral programmes the same day. That is good, but in a country like ours, where one thing or the other could cause a delay in the commencement of the funeral proceedings as stipulated in the bill, like the body not arriving early, does it mean the Church will no longer perform its duties? Or, is there a way through which they could be allowed to do this after obtaining a waiver?
The bill did its best to handle the issue of okwuozu (clause 22), which entails the official announcement or report to the natal family of a deceased married woman by her husband’s family. The bill tried to reduce the materials required of the husband’s family to fulfil this function, listing the items needed as follows: one she goat, one jar of palm wine, one carton of beer and one crate of mineral. My question is: does this really take care of the poor? Must the announcement or report be accompanied by these items to make it worthwhile?

Recommendations
Clause 19 which stops burial on a town’s market day needs to be reformulated. Burial can be done if a person dies on the market day, especially if the family does not want to preserve the co**se for a latter day. What the bill should legislate against is not burial but funeral proceedings, which involves a much more elaborate preparations and rituals.
Some towns have more than one market day. The bill should be more specific by stating that this restriction is on the town’s main or major market day.
Clause 18 on the feeding of ụmụnna, inyomdi, and ụmụada by the family “throughout the period of burial/funeral ceremony” seems ambiguous. The bill has stated that the funeral ceremony should not last beyond a day (clause 11). It should be specific that the feeding should be only for the day of the burial/funeral.
I would wish that registration of funerals in the State not be accompanied by any payment, as it may discourage people from registering. Therefore, clause 4, in my opinion, needs to be revisited.
Since bodies should be buried within two months after death (clause 6), I wonder why the mortuary attendants are “bound to report to the ministry of health” once a body stays in the mortuary for more than one month. I think they should be obliged to report if a body stays beyond two months.
Blocking of roads for funerals should be accompanied with some payments not just with permission from appropriate local government (clause 7). The payment will reduce the frequency of it, because it causes huge inconveniences to road users.
The use of material items to announce or report deaths of a deceased married woman to her natal family, in my opinion, should be stopped. I see no reason for pushing bereaved families into such expenses.
The authority accorded the towns’ monitoring committee to give clearance for every burial (clause 30.1.a) must be well regulated; otherwise, they will utilize it for witch haunting. There have been cases where such people constituted obstacles to Christian funerals, simply because the deceased or his/her relatives refused to abide by fe**sh and unchristian demands from them that were very injurious to their faith.

Conclusion
I thank you very much for this opportunity and the audience given to me. I trust the ability of the members of the House of Assembly to make this bill see the light of the day as a memorable and life-uplifting law for our people. The inputs from the public will definitely enhance its quality. My earnest prayer is that it scales through the remaining legislative stages successfully, for the good of the citizens of our dear State.

Once more, thank you. Remain blessed.

†Paulinus C. Ezeokafor Catholic Bishop of Awka

11/04/2017

A LECTURE DELIVERED BY THE MOST REV. C. O EFOBI
DEAN EMERITUS CHURCH OF NIGERIA, ARCHBISHOP PROVINCE OF THE NIGER AND BISHOP DIOCESE OF AGUATA REPRESENTED BY REV. CANON SOPULUCHUKWU UMEOJIAKA JP, ARCHBIHOP’S CHAPLAN ON SPECIAL DUTIES DURING A PUBLIC HEARING ON A BILL FOR A LAW TO CONTROL BURIAL/FUNERAL ACTIVITIES IN ANAMBRA STATE ON WEDNESDAY 5TH APRIL, 2017.

PREAMBLE:
The wish of the house committee on information, culture and tourism to organize a forum like this is a welcomed idea and also timely.
I therefore wholeheartedly accept the offer as a key resource person on this public hearing seeking to address ``the bill for a law to control burial/funeral activities in Anambra State’’.

I thank the organizers for considering it expedient to propose this bill in a time like this when people seem to have gone unwise in matters concerning burial/funeral activities not only in Anambra state but the world at large. In this paper, I have thought it right to: (a) Define the key words. (b) Shade light on the meaning of law from the biblical perspective. (c) Point out some areas of the proposed bill, I feel obligatorily requires a redress. (d) Conclusion and recommendation.

According to the Oxford Advanced Dictionary 6th edition, the subsequent words have been defined as follows:

a) Bill: - A written suggestion for a new law that is presented to a country’s parliament so that its members can discuss it to introduce/approve/reject.
(Looking at the above definition, the proposed burial/funeral bill could either be approved or rejected after proper insight must have been given to it).
b) Law: - the whole system of rules that everyone in a country or society must obey. (It is one thing to make a law; it is another thing to obey it). Remember the law is no respecter of any man. But I don’t really know whether the above saying works here in Nigeria. Nevertheless, let us watch and see if this proposed burial/funeral law will restore the respect for the rule of law in Nigeria if approved.
c) Control: - the ability to make somebody/something do what you want, to limit something or make it happen in a particular way for example, the Anambra State Parliament attempting to control excesses during burial/funeral activities in the state.
My argument here remains ‘’if the poor obey this law after discussion and approval, will the rich and the highly placed obey it?
d) Burial: - the act or ceremony of burying a dead body.
e) Funeral: - A ceremony, usually a religious one for burying or cremating (burning) a dead person. Remember that Lazarus the friend of Jesus was given a befitting burial according to the custom and religion of the Jews. Jesus as a family friend went for condolence after four days when He raised Lazarus from the dead. Jn. 11:14ff Jesus Himself raised Jairus daughter from the dead during His condolence (Mk 5:22) This means that when Jesus said ‘’ You should allow the dead to bury themselves does not mean total abandonment of the dead but a proverb used to illustrate commitment and dedication in serving Him. Joseph Arimathea was the rich man who buried Jesus Christ in his personal grave Mtt. 27:57-60, MK 15:43-46, Lk. 23:50-653 John 19:38-42. The dead certainly must be accorded befitting burials but not extravagantly.

THE LAW FROM BIBLICAL PERSPECTIVE
In the bible, the law has both Old Testament and New Testament connotations. In this discussion, the perspective of Jesus is paramount hence Jesus is the centre point of all Christian beliefs. ‘Jesus’ own attitude toward the Law is expressed fundamentally in two texts, Mtt. 5:17-20 and 22:34-40 (Cf. Mk. 10:17;12:28-31; Lk. 10:25-37. In the first He declares that He came not to abolish (Kataluein) the law or the prophets but to fulfil (Plerosai) (them)’’.

Our Lord Jesus Christ said: If you love me, keep my commandments (Jn 14:15) happy are those who hear the word of God and keep it (Lk 11:28).
The Liturgy of the church of Nigeria Anglican Communion: the order for Holy Eucharist says:
Our Lord Jesus Christ said Hear O Israel, the Lord your God is one Lord and
you shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul,
and with all your mind, and with all your strength. This is the first commandment and the second is like, namely this: you shall love your neighbour as yourself. There is no other commandment greater than these on these two commandments hang the laws and the prophets. Pg.5.
Considering the above, keeping the law of God is paramount. The summary of God’s law is the love of God and our neighbours. He who loves his neighbour should not allow him to die in suffering to give him a lavishing burial/funeral.

SOME AREAS OF THE PROPOSED BILL THAT REQUIRE A REDRESS.
I have taken time to study the committee’s proposals on the Burial/Funeral bill and unpretentiously wish to make the following observations and impute basically on the ecclesiastical matters. I do hope that other invited key resources persons will tackle their various areas of interests.

1. There shall be no celebration of life after death except in the case of Legacy seems to be ambiguous. More light should be thrown on it for self explanation.
2. The committee’s proposal for State burial grounds for abandoned co**ses is highly recommended.
3. Vigil Mass/service of songs/religious activities to terminate by 9pm in the eve prior to the burial is recommended.
4. (11) In the event of death, all burial mass/services in the State shall commence not later than 9am and shall not last for more than two hours should be re-visited. It is the duty of the Church leaders to determine the appropriate time for the burial of their departed members depending on what they have in their itineraries. The church should operate a burial service within the confines of her liturgy because a two hour service might not have room for the liturgy of the church.
5. To enable the deceased family, friends and well wishers see the deceased for the last time; appropriate time should be allocated to lying in state. A period of 30 minutes might not be sufficient for that.
6. A day interval might be too short for condolences. I suggest at least two days.

7. No person shall announce or record any cash and or item given as condolence gift. At least I know that record keeping has been an age long phenomenon.

The bible says in the book of Revelation Chapter 20 vs 12.
And I saw the dead, small and great, stand before God; and books were opened, which is the book of life: and the dead were judged out of those things which were written in the books, according to their works. Families should keep the records of condolence gifts for the sake of record keeping.
8. Gunshot of all kinds should totally be discouraged at burials /funerals.

Conclusion:
Once again, I extol the sponsors of this bill and the organizers of this forum for their conscientious efforts to see to the success of this gathering. Burial/ funeral activities in our state should not be a time for wealth display and unnecessary pecuniary competition. People should be celebrated while alive. This means that anything you can do for your fellow human being should be when he or she is alive. Like I said earlier, my little contributions to this discussion revolved within the ecclesiastical scope believing that other knowledgeable resource persons especially as it concerns traditions would have given justice to the matters that concern them. Remember that it is one thing to make a law and it is another thing to keep to the laws. In as much as we strive to enact laws that will make our state better, we must not lose sight on the major subject matter which is keeping to the commandments of the almighty God hence the bible says ‘’ Happy are those who hear the word of God and keep it. Lk. 11:28.

Recommendation:

I strongly recommend that this bill be passed after thorough scrutiny and strictly adhered to on approval.

Thanks for your patient listening.

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Anambra State Legislative Complex
Awka
420001

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